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Right after you were born, the blood and vernix on your body was washed off by a nurse or even your mom or dad. Have you taken a bath or shower since the day you were born? Of course you have. Our bodies continually become dirtied, requiring new cleansing. It...
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The New York Times ran a story this spring that profiled a strange phenomenon. Rather than institution building, it seems that some non-profits, finding that their project-based work is nearing completion, have chosen to turn off the lights gracefully.
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Today only, you can get a one-year subscription to Tabletalk Magazine for a donation of any amount. Call our resource consultants at 800-435-4343 to take advantage of this special one-day offer.
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The Reformation was born out of the biblical conviction that a man is deemed just in the sight of God, forgiven, adopted, not on the basis of his own goodness, but on the basis of the goodness of Christ imputed to him. Not everyone, however, is blessed with this imputation, but only those who trust in that provision, and in that provision alone.
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A full decade has passed since America suffered the tragedy of 9/11. Ten years ago, I repeatedly heard the question raised: “Where was God in all of this? Where was God on 9/11 when the planes crashed into the twin towers in New York, the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., and a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania?” My answer then was the same as it is now: God was in the precise place on 9/11 that He was on the day before and the day after.
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“I have been regularly and pleasantly surprised by the benefits I did not consider would come as a result of working here — from the regular staff devotional sessions, to the ongoing theological education that comes just by ‘doing my job’.”
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I recently had the opportunity to read through almost all of the books of R.C. Sproul. Along the way I built a collection of some of the best quotes from each one of them. Here are several of the best from When Worlds Collide.
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Five hundred years ago, Martin Luther penned A Simple Way to Pray, a 34-page booklet of which R.C. Sproul has said, "No book has done more to revolutionize my personal prayer life than this little book. I would recommend it for every Christian’s library.” Now this true story is available in the form of a new children's book, The Barber Who Wanted to Pray. Sproul’s beautifully illustrated story will delight children and help them learn to pray according to the Bible.
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I recently had the opportunity to read through almost all of the books of R.C. Sproul. Along the way I built a collection of some of the best quotes from each one of them. Here are several of the best from 5 Things Every Christian Needs to Grow.
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